It's amazing the way things are unwinding: very slowly and very predictable. This could have served as a warning of things to come for Bear Stearns:
"Bear Stearns Funds Own 67 Percent Stake in Everquest"
"Funds run by Bear Stearns Cos. own two- thirds of Everquest Financial Ltd., a firm that invests in debt backed by subprime mortgages and buyout loans"
On May 11th, the same day the article was published, Bear Stearns closed at $156.40. At the end of trading today, Bear closed at $139.10; Bear has lost 11 percent of it's value since May 11. It will continue to drop, we'll see where the bottom is. This chart, found on page 47, is dated March 12, 2007:
Looking at the graph, we can see that the fifth month, May 2007, was about the starting point to a rough time for homeowners with adjustable rate mortgages. As if on cue, foreclosures jumped 19 percent from April to May. If this chart is an indicator of times to come, the late summer will see another spike in mortgage resets, which should lead to an increased foreclosure rate.
Financial institutions and hedge funds that hold those mortgages should get hit harder in a few months than they are right now. This article (which I've referenced before), implicates JP Morgan Chase, Citigroup, and Merrill Lynch in the Bear Stearns fiasco, which is just picking up speed. I'm bearish on all four. I've already recommended selling Bear Stearns. Now I recommend selling the other three. This article implicates Goldman Sachs. Sell Goldman Sachs. There will be companies that will end up with the bad debt - it doesn't just disappear. A bailout from the government, a possibility depending on the severity of defaults, would be very beneficial for gold (which I've previously recommended buying).
Citigroup (C) ended trading today at $51.69. Merrill Lynch (MER) ended trading today at $83.98. JP Morgan Chase (JPM) ended trading today at $48.36. Goldman Sachs (GS) ended trading today at $216.74
Monday, June 25, 2007
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